avclub-2fc1d799b128e475f8413a49f829a975--disqus
gizmo1492
avclub-2fc1d799b128e475f8413a49f829a975--disqus

So big question, at the end of the "series", who do you think was right? Stu or Stephie? 4 more months or married?

So this story doesn't end with Zelda dying and Andrew getting back together with Madeline? Dang.

To be fair, all those crimes are also applicable to Sherlock as well.

I'd equate knowing who the villain is from knowing the Sherlock Holmes canon on roughly the same par as knowing who the villain is by knowing the famous guest star from the episode.

Thought the rooms were going for Indiana Jones motif myself.

This episode seemed to go back to their early season shenanigans/adventures roots. And that's not necessarily a bad thing either.

This is an odd moment in any kid's life. Seeing that their guardians may not have all the answers and are just as capable at making mistakes, especially when it comes to their own development.

Man, Dave Chappelle missed out on the part again? And to Nick Cannon too?

Yeah there's a few slow episodes in the beginning. But then there's a block of episodes soon after that are still probably my favorite of the show.

Also, don't download a bad episode of Burn Notice.

She's in the Adventure of the Illustrious Client

A USA show about a former US government spy that does freelance work and wants his job back because spies don't retire, they get burned (forced out).

But Stevonnie already started to find the experience a lonely one in the episode. I'm still unsure if Kevin is just meant to be the catalyst that Stevonnie used to overcome their inner conflict, or if Kevin was just meant to be part of the loneliness equation at all and was just showing a completely different issue

Admittedly I'm already starting to feel the procedural rut from the show. Give me a SVU, NCIS, or Bones episode and the case is usually entertaining enough to catch my interest regardless of the character's stories (and in the cases of SVU and NCIS, there usually isn't a character story going on). This is more like

I'm really curious how Kitty is going to handle the trauma. I'm still expecting the show to take a page from her canon counterpart for her departure.

I feel like an article would get crammed and shortened if every cartoon needed a short blurb/review instead of a full review like so, and using tonight as an example both SU and AT probably deserve full reviews.

The episode has a boy and a girl becoming one body. How could there not be sexual overtones/undertones from the episode?

There were about 50 comments on SU in the last thread, which is about 20% of the total comments.

I still have no idea how to interpret the ending. Steven and Connie are both in tears and laughter all at the same time. Guess I'm just glad the two are enjoying themselves in the rain of glowsticks.

Wasn't there a USA 30 minute sitcom that did get renewed that aired at 10 too? Or am I thinking of someone else?